An early bird doesn’t catch the worm.
This U.K. import, ostensibly about size comparisons, has an unseen narrator loudly scolding Marcel, a large bird, who’s apparently consumed Steve, a small worm. How does the unseen narrator know? The illustrations clearly show Marcel ambling off, a worm’s body dangling from the bird’s beak. Steve’s released unharmed, though. The lesson resumes, but the disgruntled Marcel flies off with Steve again, disrupting the proceedings. Marcel smashes into a tree and falls to the ground, and Steve drops from Marcel’s mouth. The narrator attempts the lesson again, and Marcel makes another grab for adorable, wide-eyed Steve, who’s been unperturbed about everything and has simply adjusted his tiny hat. The narrator admonishes Marcel: “YOU ARE NOT JUST LETTING YOURSELF DOWN. YOU ARE LETTING EVERYBODY DOWN.” The narrator issues an ultimate warning, finally getting around to the exercise’s original point: Marcel is big, while Steve is small. The “math lesson” draws to a close. But Marcel is now missing. The final illustration’s a hoot—Marcel finally gets some comeuppance upon encountering an even bigger predator. Talk about comparative sizes! The hilarious, crisp color illustrations incorporate creative typesetting into the artwork, wonderfully abetting the side-splitting proceedings.
Kids won’t want to eat the titular character, but they’ll definitely gobble this tale up.
(Picture book. 4-7)